It is strange why Sogrin doesn't name the person that gave the information which says they dropped dropped rocket stages over the northern Urals?
It's not a big deal to find out who that person was. In one of his interviews Mr.Sogrin provided more details about that episode.
"In the mid 1970s, Ivan D. Bogachev, a master of sports from Moscow, came to Pamir in summer as an authorized representative of the USSR Sports Committee for Mountaineering. He worked at a top-secret enterprise or research institute. ... Being with Ivan on the Iskander-Kul lake in the Fan mountains, in the evening we had a conversation around the campfire about hiking, and I told him in detail the story of Dyatlov. I quote his words almost exactly -
<In the 50s, we used to drop spent rockets' stages to the Northern Urals, where they burned up entering dense layers of atmosphere. Perhaps, some parts reached the ground. Dyatlov witnessed and became a victim of such event, as he happened to be in close proximity to the burning rocket carrier. We had chosen that area because there were no houses or people for hundreds of kilometers, except for occasional local hunters who might wander into the area.>
After his words, everything fell into place and received a logical explanation for those events. This was further confirmed by the discovery of pieces of fuselage in the Northern Urals, which were clearly of rocket origin."
There are a number of quotes senior Maldonado.
Hence my question. You have taken a long time to regurgitate what has already been put forward as new information?. This was already said in in 2012 . Your argument for a rocket has always been put forward but you have added nothing new to the debate interesting as it is , the debate already exists. I was expecting something new from your protracted responses .
Many years later, in the early 70s, I met I.D. Bogachev, a master of sports in mountaineering, in the Pamirs. He worked in Moscow at some secret research institute. In the evening, by the fire on Lake Iskander Kul, we were talking about mountains and people. I told him the story of Dyatlov, to which he answered me verbatim the following: "In those years, we dropped spent stages of rocket carriers into uninhabited areas of the Northern Urals, and Dyatlov became a victim of this." It was impossible to ask more questions, he worked, as they said then, in the "box". So he said too much[.[/b]
The question remains, but seems to be strongly denied, that any flying missiles or rocket stages could have fallen in the dyatlov pass region . I still don't know your proposal, that is, if just fuel melted the ground and snow but the rocket stage landed out with the area , or the rocket stage fell close by?.
I don't know why you don't give all quotes, time lines and research the authors of said statements. The case files are the key source of information. Much of what has been said by witnesses after the event would seem to have been manipulated by the media. The media tries to sell story's , not facts.
As I understand it, your theory revolves around a space rocket stage flying over the tent but not landing. Various chemicals dispersed in the air making the snow wet ( I don't know if you mean the fuel ignited and caused snow to melt that created the prints and Ice field or the liquid melted the snow and it is this that caused the footprints?)
I don't know if your argument is that they started the fire at the cedar and this caused an explosion that broke ribs and the wind burn on the trees that ivanov thought he saw.
Please just say it how it is because it's like pulling teeth . Long and drawn out .
What pieces of fuselage were found of rocket design were found in the northern Urals?